SEEDLING RECRUITMENT IN FORESTS - CALIBRATING MODELS TO PREDICT PATTERNS OF TREE SEEDLING DISPERSION
Authored by SW Pacala, E RIBBENS, JA SILANDER
Date Published: 1994
DOI: 10.2307/1939638
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
SORTIE
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Recruitment, the addition of new individuals into a community, is an
important factor that can substantially affect community composition and
dynamics. We present a method for calibrating spatial models of plant
recruitment that does not require identifying the specific parent of
each recruit. This method calibrates seedling recruitment functions by
comparing tree seedling distributions with adult distributions via a
maximum likelihood analysis. The models obtained from this method can
then be used to predict the spatial distributions of seedlings from
adult distributions.
We calibrated recruitment functions for 10 tree species characteristic
of transition oak-northern hardwood forests. Significant differences
were found in recruit abundances and spatial distributions. Predicted
seedling recruitment limitation for test stands varied substantially
between species, with little recruitment limitation for some species and
strong recruitment limitation for others. Recruitment was limited due to
low overall recruit production or to restricted recruit dispersion. When
these seedling recruitment parameters were incorporated into a spatial, individual-based model of forest dynamics, called SORTIE, alterations of
recruitment parameters produced substantial changes in species
abundance, providing additional support for the potential importance of
seedling recruitment processes in community structure and dynamics.
Tags
Coexistence
Predation
scale
Fire
Succession
Plants
Tropical forests
Fagus-grandifolia
Understory